The definitive, eccentric journal of an unlikely caregiver, continued.
Apologia for these journals:
They are not about taking care of a relative with moderate to severe Alzheimer's/senile dementia.
For an explanation of what these journals are about, click the link above.
For internet sources that are about caring for relatives with moderate to severe
Alzheimer's/senile dementia, click through the Honorable Alzheimer's Blogs in my
links section to the right.
7 minute Audio Introduction to The Mom & Me Journals [a bit dated, at the moment]
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Bereavement Observations #4: Taste and Death
A few days ago I made one of my favorite things to eat for the first time since my mother's death: A toasted tuna salad sandwich on sourdough bread. Making and eating it was like a small celebration of my mother's and my life and, as well, of my life without my mother. I made the tuna, mostly, the same way I did when my mother was alive, adding lots of minced yellow onion, minced fresh celery with leaves, dill pickle relish (dried between paper towels to remove as much moisture as possible...I hate wet tuna salad), celery salt, an-off-the shelf salad seasoning that I discovered many years ago and onion powder (my secret ingredient). The differences were: I didn't use nearly as much mayonnaise as I did when I made these sandwiches for my mother and me, I only require enough to glue everything in the mix together while my mother required enough to add a definitive "white glue" taste to the sandwich; I didn't add cheese to transform the sandwich into a tuna melt, which my mother loved; I used only a hint of the salt based flavorings rather than enough to change the taste of the tuna; I used Pam in the skillet to toast the bread instead of buttering the bread before placing the sandwich in the skillet because I don't like greasy toasted bread.
As I made the sandwich and reviewed the differences between my mother's food preferences and mine I realized that, while she was alive, it was important to me to make food the way she liked while retaining tastes that I liked and that I preferred to be eating exactly what I prepared for her to eat so that, as we discussed each meal (which we always did), I was in tune with what she was describing.
The differences between what I prepared for my mother and I to eat and what I prepare for myself to eat alone seem small but are profound:
- I haven't eaten, or used, an egg since the week after my mother died;
- Without trying, I am eating far less meat than we ate when she was alive, which means I am back to using meat mainly as a flavor booster rather than a main ingredient;
- I use far less cheese than I did when she was alive;
- It is not uncommon for me to prepare a meal for myself with nothing but vegetables...my mother would never have stood for such a meal;
- I not only can handle but prefer sauces and dressings that are more acidic than my mother liked, thus, I add only a small fraction as much sugar to the salad dressings and tomato based sauces I now make than I used to add when preparing them for my mother and I;
- My mother preferred noodles to rice and white rice to brown and mixed rice, thus I've been pawning half used bags of noodles and white rice off on my friends since my mother died;
- I'm discovering that, although I thought the two of us consumed little enough salt, the frozen leftovers from before my mother died, through which I am still in the process of working, are a little too salty for my taste;
- Now that I don't have to cook breakfast, I hardly ever eat breakfast meat, except in a BLT (if I can get really flavorful tomatoes) or as a flavor booster in beans;
- I prefer, for instance, a bowl of home made chili to nachos made with generic chili; meat with steamed vegetables rather than meat with stewed vegetables.
- Take-out fast food really isn't as flavorful as my mother thought; nor as I thought when we ate it together.
If eating is possible at the Elsewhere Bar, I suspect that my mother, too, is reveling in some of her old favorites that she hadn't eaten for years since I took over the cooking. I imagine the first meal she ordered was a baloney, ham and yellow cheese sandwich on white Wonderbread, slathered with Sandwich Spread and Miracle Whip and margarine with several Bread & Butter pickles squeezed between the layers, accompanied with Cheetos (just leave the bag here, please) and, of course, dessert: Several handfuls of Hershey's Almond Kisses.
Later.
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If, at the Elsewhere, my dad has anything to do with it, there will be ham and pickle relish sandwiches on white bread, a crisp red delicious apple, some peanuts, and a really cold frosty beer.
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All material, except that not written by me, copyright at time of posting by Gail Rae Hudson